Monthly Archives: May 2013

‘How has football lived without it?’ – The impact of technology on tennis, baseball & other sports

The introduction of Hawk-Eye in the English Premier League is not the first example of sports using technology to make on-field decisions, with positive and negative impacts

SPECIAL REPORT
By Kris Voakes

As football gets ready to step into the technological era for the first time with the introduction of Hawk-Eye goal-line decisions in the English Premier League in 2013-14, there have been continued debates as to whether the sport is making the right move by veering away from the tradition of the referee having the final say.

But there have been regular uses of technology and video replay in several sports before now. Countless other pastimes, with their own set of rules and traditions, have long since bowed down to the power of the modern world in an attempt to get as many decisions right as possible.

Has technology been a success elsewhere though? Goal has spoken exclusively with players, officials, coaches and broadcasters to find out how its use has changed their sport, for better or worse.

BASEBALL
Chicago Cubs play-by-play TV announcer Len Kasper


Since 2008, Major League Baseball (MLB) has used instant replay to adjudge questionable boundary calls such as home runs, with the field umpires going into a replay room to check video feeds sent from the MLB offices in New York City.

“I think the main idea is to get correct as many calls as possible. When everybody watching the game on TV can see what the proper call is, the four umpires on the field need to have that assistance at their disposal. By and large, [instant replay] has been successful as many ‘bad’ calls have been overturned.

“The tricky part of extending video to decide close calls on bases is in resetting the baserunners after a call is overturned. I suppose there can be ways to do that, but the toughest part of making tag plays or anything within the field of play subject to further replay is that you have to then go back and ‘reconstruct’ the play.

“I am not in favour of balls and strikes being called electronically. I think the logistics would be a nightmare and I still like the human element of the game in that regard. I think the best way to cut out the delay when umpires disappear to the video room is to have an extra umpire in a booth or suite who can quickly look at replays and radio down to the crew chief. Using a video board in the park is problematic because 1) not all parks have great boards and 2) having it be so public is asking for too much potential fan dissent, in my opinion.”

CRICKET
Former international umpire Dickie Bird


Cricket first introduced the third umpire in 1992 to adjudicate on run-outs, but now has the Umpire Decision Review System which allows players to refer umpires’ decisions to Hawk-Eye.

“I’m all for helping umpires as long as we don’t go too far with it. Regarding football, I think that it’s excellent that they’re bringing in goal-line technology because that causes a lot of controversy. In cricket, the close run-out is the most difficult decision to make and technology for run-outs is very good.

“What worries me is that all the authority is taken away from the umpire now because most of the decisions, in fact every decision, is made by the electronic aid. That is sad. Electronic aids are here to stay, that’s for definite. They’ll probably bring more in now.

“If the umpire made a mistake in my era the press talked about it, radio talked about it, they talked about it in the working men’s clubs and the pubs. It was part of the game. In fact it made the game and it’s sad that all of that has gone. I’d leave it to the umpire instead of it going to the electronic aid.

“I don’t think they’ll bring any more into football because they can’t afford to keep stopping the game because it’s only 90 minutes. Even in a test match over five days, I feel that spectators don’t like to see a game held up all the time while it goes to the third umpire. When it goes to the third umpire it sometimes takes a long while to come back. It’s a noticeable delay.

“I can’t see where any more technology can come into football, because Michel Platini has said in the press that he wouldn’t have any at all, even the goal-line technology. He would have left it, because as he said, it takes something away from football. The excitement, the thrill, people talking about it. But they’re here to stay now.”

RUGBY LEAGUE
Salford & ex-Great Britain coach Brian Noble


The video referee has been a feature of rugby league since the inception of Super League in 1996, with dubious tries being referred to video in all live TV games in the top flight and major cup competitions.

“I was a massive fan of the video referee system coming into rugby league and its introduction in our game has just added to the drama. You’re waiting for the result of the video call looking at the screen to see if it was or wasn’t a try rather than having down time. I don’t know whether football can have any kind of big screen or not but half of the drama in our game is about trying to judge which way the video referee adjudication will go. But it has the ability to say either way whether it was or it wasn’t, and I think it has been first class and is long overdue in football.

“I think you’re still going to get debate over five per cent of the decisions because even when you see a video referral you can form a different opinion, but I think it is far more clear-cut in football. If the ball is over the line, it’s a goal, although I think they could well use technology for a lot of other things.

“The big misconception is that it slows the game down, but it doesn’t at all. It takes a couple of seconds, then you get ‘Yes, it did go over the line’ or ‘No, it didn’t’, and then everybody’s happy because you got the right decision. And players will be happy with that too. In rugby league we sometimes beat ourselves up over the technology, but it’s the right thing.

“I think where we do have a problem is when a decision remains unclear and we have a debate still about whether or not it was a try and then it comes down to the referee’s call. In those scenarios it should go back to the referee’s decision. I’ve always said that the referee has to have an opinion, because if they can’t solve it with the cameras then that opinion counts. The referee should be saying ‘I think X happened but can you check it for me,’ and then if there is no clear evidence otherwise it should come back to his call.

“We certainly need to get better [with our use of video]. Touch judges need to be diligent when it comes to forward passes, which cannot be called by video because of camera angles, but there’s always going to be a few that get away. That can’t be helped. But anything that’s blatant, it can be decided from the camera.”

TENNIS
Broadcaster and former Grand Slam finalist Andrew Castle


Tennis has used Hawk-Eye to adjudicate on line calls since 2006, with players having the ability to challenge the umpire’s decision three times a set.

“I’m sure there’s a whole load of politics as to why Hawk-Eye hasn’t been used in the past and the fear in football will be the same fear that I had with tennis in that you’re slightly messing with a formula which is clearly successful. It’s a great sport, it’s Britain’s national sport and people don’t like change, they resist it. But to tennis this has been just a huge addition, it increases not only everybody’s enjoyment but the chances of the right decision being made. You can’t expect the referee to be everywhere, he can’t be everywhere and with Hawk-Eye you’ve got the chance to get things right and the team that should come out with the win is more likely to because you’re going to get good and right decisions, and that’s it.

“[When it came into tennis] I was wondering ‘How is this going to be applied? How’s this going to work? Is everybody going to have access to this? How is it going to be implemented?’ The big question I had was over whether it was going to interrupt the flow of the game, and I tell you what: In 10 years time, you’re going to wonder how you ever lived without it in football! I played with this system as a player and I’ve commentated with it and there’s nothing that is negative about it. It is just the right thing to do.

“We have a staccato where it is only used for line calls. It is all about whether a decision was made that was right or whether the decision was wrong. In football I think there should be two appeals per half and there should be time-outs like in basketball. Alex Ferguson would have got a say instead of chewing his gum and looking angry and poking his finger in the technical area, or Arsene Wenger or whoever it is showing incredibly poor sportsmanship sometimes, but I understand their frustration.

“What they should be able to do is say to the technical bloke ‘Stop the game’ and when the play stops next time you should be able to go back and review the decision. This could be harder in football, but for instance if a goal is scored that is offside then the goal can be disallowed. A goal has gone in so play has stopped and you should be able to challenge that decision. If some team has gone 1-0 up and it was offside, then it was offside and it shouldn’t count! Stop the game! It would be great. It’s going to be unbelievable, the crowd would go ballistic! You’d get big screens playing the decisions, it’s just awesome.

“I wouldn’t have thought there’d be a single player on the tennis tour who isn’t totally convinced that it’s the right thing to have, even though there is a built-in margin of tolerance. There has to be a margin, we’re talking about millimetres and fractions of millimetres. It’s a lot more accurate than the human eye, it is as simple as that.

“People like John McEnroe, God bless him, will always find something to moan about, but frankly what we’re trying to do is get the right result and with this technology you’re more likely to get the right result. After all the training and all the commitment and the professionalism and everything else, that is what you’re after. You’re looking for the right result. This is these players’ careers, this is their livelihoods, they deserve the best possible and most accurate officiating, and this is the way to it.”

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Only Messi & Ronaldo have scored more league goals than Di Natale since 2009

The Udinese front man has bagged more than 100 goals in four years to put to shame stars such as Falcao, Cavani, Ibrahimovic and Van Persie

By Matteo Ronchetti

Good things come in small packages, while many get better with age. Antonio Di Natale has been likened to the finest of wines, but the Udinese centre-forward hardly needs superlatives. Such is his goalscoring record in recent times, he can simply be described as one of the best strikers in football.

Despite earning his wage at a provincial club whose attacking phases come at less frequent intervals than some of the sport’s bigger-name outfits, Di Natale has racked up a phenomenal 102 goals in the last four league seasons to leave some of football’s most talked-about front men in his shadow. After netting 29 goals in 2009-10, he earned a second successive Capocannoniere crown with 28 more the following year. Last season’s 23 and this term’s 22 have ensured that his consistency in front of goal has helped Udinese to punch above their weight a while longer.

The numbers are extraordinary. Only Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo – with 161 and 145 goals respectively – can boast better goal tallies over the same period. The Argentine has bagged totals of 34, 31, 50 and 46 in the last four seasons with Barcelona, while Real Madrid’s Ronaldo has picked up 26, 40, 46 and 33 in the corresponding campaigns. The pair’s records are frankly untouchable, especially given the relative power of their two clubs compared to the rest of La Liga, and Di Natale’s relative handicap given his playing surroundings make his chalking up four consecutive 20-goal campaigns even more noteworthy. Alongside Messi and Ronaldo, he is the only player in a top European league with such a record.

In Serie A, that feat had not been achieved in 51 years since Jose Altafini last recorded the same number of 20-goal seasons. Before him, Istvan Nyers, Gunnar Nordahl (with seven successive seasons) and Giuseppe Meazza (five seasons) had also reached the same mark. But not only is Di Natale only the fifth player to score so consistently in Italy, he is also outscoring the current game’s big names at an alarming rate.

Radamel Falcao, who cost Atletico Madrid €47 million is not incredibly far behind, but he does trail Di Natale. Over his spells with Porto and Atleti he has chalked up 92 goals in the league. Even Edinson Cavani, who has been on fire in his three seasons with Napoli, sees his average drop thanks to his final season with Palermo when he scored 13 times. Zlatan Ibrahimovic – between Barcelona, Milan and Paris Saint-Germain – has scored 17 fewer goals than Di Natale, while Robin van Persie has netted 82, thanks in part to an injury-hit 2009-10 season at Arsenal during which he struck just nine times

The Dutchman’s ratio for that season is still impressive given he only played 16 times, but even then it doesn’t match that of Udinese’s finest. Further down the list are star names such as Wayne Rooney (76), Mario Gomez (75) and Robert Lewandowski (71). Bigger gaps still can be found between the Italy striker’s record and those of Sergio Aguero (66), Carlos Tevez (58) and Francesco Totti (49).

It would be harsh, however, to try to compare full European records with that of Raul, with the one-time Real Madrid captain having shared his recent goalscoring feats between Schalke and Al Sadd. The Spaniard has scored 42 in four years, including just nine in Qatar. The 2009-10 season was when things started to tail off for the great number seven, but the opposite can be said of Di Natale. At 35, he shows no sign of slowing down. We can only hope he keeps it up for some time yet.

ELSEWHERE…
By Kris Voakes

  • The inevitable finally happened on Sunday when Palermo’s 1-0 defeat to Fiorentina condemned them to relegation alongside Siena and Pescara. It was fitting, perhaps, that a Luca Toni goal should send them to Serie B given that the former Italy striker had scored 30 goals in firing them into the top flight nine years ago when wearing the famous pink shirt. The Sicilians must now regather themselves and restructure the club if they are to bounce straight back, but one cannot help but feel that if Maurizio Zamparini’s trigger finger isn’t checked for itching powder then the status quo of struggle and short-termism could continue a while longer. They have given us some great memories since 2004, with the goals of Toni, the genius of Fabrizio Miccoli, the rise of Javier Pastore and Andrea Barzagli, and the final fling of Eugenio Corini, but now the honeymoon is over.
  • The Viola‘s win extends the fight for the Champions League football into the final 90 minutes of the season thanks to Milan’s tempestuous 0-0 draw with Roma. The home side, donning their ugly new gold away kit, held on for the point after losing Sulley Muntari for mindlessly man-handling referee Gianluca Rocchi in the first half. Francesco Totti would also walk in injury-time for a ridiculous elbow on former team-mate Philippe Mexes to ensure that a magnificent league season on a personal level for the famous No.10 finishes one round early. Meanwhile for Milan, a nervy last day will see them travel to Siena while Fiorentina are at Pescara, with the Rossoneri needing a win to claim third place.
  • Give the Coach of the Year award to Francesco Guidolin right now! A seventh win on the trot for Udinese – a 2-1 victory over Atalanta – has put them on the verge of European football yet again despite the annual cull of his squad last summer which had left many observers tipping the Friulani for relegation. Not only have Di Natale’s goals boosted them, but Guidolin’s magnificent direction has been priceless. With each campaign in the north east he seems to get the side fighting even further beyond their weight, and on the weekend we say goodbye to Palermo it is worth remembering the job he did in Sicily between 2003 and 2005. In fact, scrap the Coach of the Year statement… Give him Coach of the Decade instead.

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Liverpool striker Sturridge keen to replicate Drogba’s mental strength

The forward, who scored a hat-trick against Fulham, learned a lot from playing alongside the Ivorian and believes he is benefiting from regular game time with the Anfield outfit

Liverpool forward Daniel Sturridge says he is keen to replicate the mental strength displayed by Didier Drogba during his time at Chelsea.

Following his arrival at Anfield from Stamford Bridge in January, the 23-year-old has scored 11 goals in 15 appearances for Brendan Rodgers’ side, which includes six goals in his last six matches.

Sturridge claims his ability enhanced under the tutelage of Drogba and believes mental strength is key to becoming one of the best players in the world.

“Being strong mentally is the one thing that can separate you from anyone else,” Sturridge told the club’s official website.

“When I worked with Drogba at Chelsea, the one strength he had above everybody was his mental strength.

“I learned a lot from working with him about what it takes to be a top player. Hopefully I’ll become one.”

Sturridge netted a hat-trick to secure a 3-1 win over Fulham on Sunday and the striker believes he is benefiting from playing regularly, unlike at Chelsea.

“It’s a fantastic feeling to score a hat-trick. Hopefully I’ll have a long career ahead of me with Liverpool,” said Sturridge.

“I am a lot more peaceful and I’m playing with a clear mind.

“Before there were a lot of things going on and mentally it was hard for me. It’s difficult when you do well and then don’t play the next game as you feel ‘what more can I do?'”